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This book provides an introduction to covering crises, considering practice issues and providing guidance in preparing for and responding to calamities. It offers a concise overview for journalism academics and practitioners of covering disasters - not a "how to" handbook but a "how to prepare" reference to be used before a crisis occurs. This essential resource is among the first to focus specifically and comprehensively on journalistic coverage of disasters. It demonstrates the application of scholarship and theory to professional practice, and includes a crash book template with logistical…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book provides an introduction to covering crises, considering practice issues and providing guidance in preparing for and responding to calamities. It offers a concise overview for journalism academics and practitioners of covering disasters - not a "how to" handbook but a "how to prepare" reference to be used before a crisis occurs. This essential resource is among the first to focus specifically and comprehensively on journalistic coverage of disasters. It demonstrates the application of scholarship and theory to professional practice, and includes a crash book template with logistical and information-collection requirements. As a text for advanced reporting, broadcast journalism, and journalism ethics, or a reference for professionals, Reporting Disaster on Deadline provides key information for keeping on deadline in responding to crises.
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Autorenporträt
Marty Steffens is SABEW Chair of business and financial journalism at the University of Missouri. She was a newspaper reporter and editor for 30 years, including executive editor of the San Francisco Examiner, Binghamton (NY) Press and Sun-Bulletin. She's worked many disasters in working at other such newspapers as the Los Angeles Times, Dayton Daily News, St. Paul Pioneer-Press and Minneapolis Star. Lee Wilkins is a former newspaper reporter and editor who studies media coverage of disasters and hazards. She has written or edited books and articles about the Bhopal, India, chemical spill, the 1993 mid-west flood, global climate change, and El Nino, among other events. She is now a Curator's Teaching Professor at the University of Missouri where she also teaches and writes extensively about media ethics. Fred Vultee is an assistant professor of journalism in the Wayne State University Communication Department. He studies the ways in which traditional media and new media function in conflicts and crises. As a longtime newspaper journalist, he was frequently involved in the coverage of natural and technological disasters, and he may be the only member of the "Disasters on Deadline" team to have spent the night under a table in the newsroom during a hurricane. Esther Thorson is Associate Dean of the School of Journalism at the University of Missouri-Columbia, and Director of Research for the Reynolds Journalism Institute. Thorson has published extensively on the news industry, advertising, news effects and health communication. Her scholarly work has won many research and writing awards and she has advised more than 40 doctoral dissertations. She is the only female Fellow of the American Academy of Advertising. She also consults extensively with newspaper companies and advertisers. Some of her latest work focuses on newspaper economics. As Associate Professor in the Missouri School of Journalism and Executive News Editor at KOMU-8 TV, Greeley Kyle teaches reporting, interviewing, writing, visual storytelling and many of the intricacies of broadcast news. Previously (1984-1994), Greeley was the senior correspondent for WMC-TV in Memphis, Tennessee and headed the "Target 5" investigative team. As a journalist, he's won several of UNDA's Gabriel awards, Sigma Delta Chi's first ever Golden Press Card as well as awards for spot and feature news coverage. As an educator, Greeley's been awarded the Maxine Shutz Distinguished Professor Award, the local NABJ Professor of the Year, and was selected a University of Missouri "Icon." Associate Professor Kent Collins has been managing news stories and newsrooms for 40 years, in the small market, medium market, and large market. He has designed "crash books" to give radio and television newsrooms step-by-step instructions for covering disasters on deadline. Collins presents interactive disaster-on-deadline seminars for broadcasters associations nationwide.